Wild Compassion

Human-Wildlife Conflict Prevention

Humans have profoundly impacted wildlife and the environment. We need to develop a better understanding of the broader factors contributing to human-wildlife conflicts, including climatic factors, land use, agricultural practices and wildlife management initiatives.

Human-wildlife conflicts are best described as interactions among humans and wildlife when the actions negatively impact one, the other or both. Conflicts vary depending on where they take place, time of year and type of wild species.

The increase in both urban and rural development to accommodate Canada’s population has resulted in a greater number of interactions with wildlife.

Animal Alliance is committed to innovative, effective, humane and non-lethal solutions to human-wildlife conflicts. We are currently working on a number of human-wildlife conflict issues, including:

The Alberta and Saskatchewan governments use toxic poisons, Strychnine and Compound 1080 to kill wildlife when they come in conflict with humans. They are the last two provinces in Canada using these draconian substances. With your help, we will fight to stop these governments from using these poisons.

The Saskatchewan government must provide a notice of intent to renew their application to use Compound 1080 by September 24, 2010. They have not done so to date, which gives us an opportunity to oppose the renewal. The deadline for Alberta’s renewal of Strychnine is December 2017.

In addition, the federal Pest Management Regulatory Agency reviews restricted products like Strychnine and Compound 1080. The agency fails to consider the cruel nature of the poison, the matter of secondary poisoning and the broader and long term impacts of the poison on the environment. We intend to engage the Agency regarding the obvious inadequacies of the review and approval process. Click here to read our 2010 letter to supporters.

Animal Alliance continues to work with municipalities across Canada in an effort to end hunting and trapping as a solution to human-wildlife conflict issues. If there is a conflict in your area, please contact us today.

Beaver

Beavers are a keystone species, meaning that they play a critical role in maintaining or improving the biodiversity of ecosystems, and that many species, some endangered or threatened, rely on beavers and the landscapes they engineer. There are numerous benefits that other species, including humans, can derive from beavers – including the benefits derived from the wetlands they create, improved water quality and availability, and their contribution to local biodiversity.

In many cases, the most pressing issue regarding beavers is not how to manage their populations, but rather how to minimize conflict between humans and beavers. There are many ways to manage conflicts effectively, humanely, and safely, while protecting beavers for the benefits they bestow to the environment.

The economic reality is that preventative measures cost eight times less than reactive and repetitive measures, when costs otherwise buried in road, drainage, stormwater, and forestry department budgets are considered.

This is a manual with the most current and widely accepted tools to allow wildlife managers to maintain beavers and their contribution to healthy ecosystems, while mitigating conflict and assuring public safety.

Saskatchewan’s beaver bounty is a good example of a controversial effort to control the beaver population (click here for a 2016 CBC article). We encourage those who are upset with the killing contest to contact the Premier, Brad Wall.

Animal Alliance has worked with many organizations and government officials to develop a humane, non-lethal approach to human-geese conflicts.

Most urban conflicts occur from June to mid July when the birds are flightless and at their maximum numbers. They congregate in large numbers in municipal parks, around storm water management ponds and along urban shorelines and come in conflict with residents who are using the facilities for recreational purposes. Residents complain of goose faeces and grass damage.

Animal Alliance has developed a Habitat Modification & Canada Geese manual. The purpose of this manual is to provide parks and wildlife personnel, government officials, as well as advocates of wildlife preservation and restoration ecology with information relating to the habitat needs and deterrents of Canada Geese in urban environments. Habitat modification as a means of reducing human-goose conflicts works on a site specific basis. It offers a choice between eliminating the use of the site by geese
altogether or accommodating the geese in such a way as to reduce or eliminate conflict.

Habitat modification through natural landscaping techniques offers both an ecological and humane means of reducing human-goose conflicts in urban, suburban and even agricultural environments.

Most rural conflicts occur in the spring, when the early wheat begins to grow, and the late summer and early fall, when crops mature and are ready for harvesting. Farmers complain of crop damage. For example, the economic impact on Ontario agriculture of all wildlife is estimated at $41,000,000 (Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement Association, www.ontariosoilcrop.org). Therefore the average damage per farm in Ontario (close to 60,000 farms) is $683.00. Wheat damage, the main crop attractive to geese, other migratory birds and wildlife was estimated at total of $979,171.

The Canadian Wildlife Service’s brochure titled Canada Geese and Farms suggest habitat modification as a mitigation measure. The brochure suggests that the farmer “focus efforts on the area between cultivated land and ponds or other wetlands. Create natural barriers of trees, brush and shrubs around ponds, wetlands and streams. If you have a pond, avoid creating islands or peninsulas which are ideal nesting sites for geese.”

Organizations, such as GeesePeace, have formed to provide conflict resolution measures where geese and people are in conflict. GeesePeace is dedicated to building better communities though innovative, effective, and humane solutions to wildlife conflicts.

The Habitat Modification & Canada Geese manual is available to all interested parties (for manual appendicies, click here). We feel this is of particular interest to municipalities dealing with human-goose conflicts in their area. The manual features numerous case studies in locations in USA and Canada that have implemented habitat modification practices.

Double-crested Cormorants

Double-crested Cormorants are native colonial waterbirds. In the late 1800s and early 1900s cormorant numbers were dramatically reduced because of persecution by fishers and others who killed the birds. As a result of protection, cormorant populations began to recover, reaching approximately 900 nesting pairs in the early 1950s, but impact from toxic chemicals such as DDT again reduced their numbers to 125 nesting pairs in 1973.

From the 1970s to present day, cormorant numbers are returning to those of pre-persecution days, a success story for sure.

But now wildlife management agencies across North America are calling the cormorant population “overabundant” and “unnatural”. One document classified cormorants as “grotesquely hyperabundant”.

Animal Alliance has joined with a coalition of organizations to stop the continent-wide lethal management of cormorants

Coyotes

From the time Europeans settled North America, coyotes have been persecuted because of conflicts, including preying on livestock. Coyotes have thrived despite organized attempts made to eradicate them in the first half of the 20th century. Governments offered bounties and funded extensive coyote “control” programs. Farmers even poisoned dead livestock and left them for the coyotes to eat.

Animal Alliance has worked to reduce human-coyote conflicts through education and non-lethal intervention programmes, specifically in communities that are experiencing conflict, such as Sarnia, Toronto and Ottawa.

Stanley Gehrt is an associate professor at Ohio State University and has been studying coyote behavior in urban Chicago for over 12 years. Gehrt found that “urban coyote populations are much larger than expected; that they live longer than their rural cousins in these environments; and that they are more active at nighttime than coyotes living in rural areas.” (click here for the January 2009 article) As a coyote expert, he has written about human-coyote conflicts and how they can be resolved. A document titled Urban Coyote Ecology and Management provides an excellent overview of coyotes and conflict resolution possibilites.

In spite of our recommendations, in November 2009, Saskatchewan introduced a coyote bounty, paying residents $20 if they produced four paws of a killed coyote. In February 2010, the government announced 18,000 coyotes were killed, about one half of their target number.

In spite of biologists and conservationists providing evidence to the contrary, then Agriculture Minister Bob Bjornerud believed the bounty was necessary. For a May 2010 article, click here.

We need to keep pressure on the Premier of Saskatchewan, the Honourable Brad Wall. Please mail and call the Premier, politely asking him to make progressive advancements in his province. Hand-written letters are best but you can also email him: premier@gov.sk.ca

Deer are under attack by wildlife managers throughout North America. Persistent human encroachment into deer habitat have resulted in conflicts between deer and people. Governments claim that deer populations are “overabundant”, their numbers higher than at any time in the past. They make statements about deer without any data or science to support their claims. As a result of the “hyperabundance” categorization, governments argue that deer are causing more vehicular collisions, agricultural and forest damage and present health risks through ticks carrying Lyme disease.

Consequently, wildlife managers advocate that more deer be killed during hunting season and that hunting seasons be extended. They advocate culling of deer in parks and protected areas because they claim that the deer are damaging forest habitats. And they advocate hunting in urban settings were deer habituate urban river valleys and green spaces.

Animal Alliance has actively opposed all lethal management of deer through municipal councils and provincial governments. The case of the Sifton Bog deer in London, Ontario provides a good example of a human-wildlife conflict situation. The municipal council, conservation authority and wildlife managers were advocating lethal cull of all but eight of the 50 deer who reside in the bog. The animal protection community and many area residents opposed the cull successfully.